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Rydal Mount

Castle • Westmorland and Furness • LA22 9LU
Rydal Mount

Rydal Mount in Cumbria was the home of the poet William Wordsworth for the last 37 years of his life, from 1813 until his death in 1850, and represents the most sustained domestic setting in the life of one of the greatest English poets. The house sits above the small lake of Rydal Water in a landscape of spectacular beauty that directly fed Wordsworth's imagination throughout the long final chapter of his writing life, and the garden he designed and tended here with considerable personal involvement preserves his horticultural vision almost exactly as he left it. The house itself is a comfortable sixteenth-century farmhouse extended in the eighteenth century that Wordsworth rented throughout his residence, never owning it outright. By the time he moved here he was already famous and the Lake District was well established as a destination for literary pilgrims who wished to see the landscapes that had inspired his poetry. The house attracted a constant stream of distinguished visitors throughout the Wordsworth years, including Thomas Carlyle, Harriet Martineau, Mary Shelley and Queen Adelaide, who visited in 1840. The garden at Rydal Mount reflects Wordsworth's particular vision of the relationship between nature and cultivation, a vision that rejected the formal or baroque style in favour of something that appeared to grow naturally from the landscape while actually being carefully planned and maintained. The terraced garden descends the hillside in a series of informal levels, with walks through trees and shrubbery designed to reveal successive views across the valley rather than presenting a single designed prospect. The terracing and the upper woodland area above the house are substantially as Wordsworth left them. Inside the house, which remains in the ownership of Wordsworth's descendants, the rooms preserve an atmosphere of lived-in domesticity rather than the formal museum quality of many literary houses. The study where Wordsworth worked, the drawing room where family and guests gathered and the bedrooms are furnished with period pieces including some that belonged to the Wordsworth family. The surrounding Lake District landscape, Rydal Water below and the fell path that Wordsworth walked daily to dictate his poetry to his sister Dorothy and wife Mary while composing out of doors, can be explored through the public footpaths that thread through the valley.

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